A composite record of the Sun's total irradiance compiled from measurements made by five independent space-based radiometers since 1978 exhibits a prominent 11-year cycle with similar levels during 1986 and 1996, the two most recent minimum epochs of solar activity. This finding contradicts recent assertions of a 0.04% irradiance increase from the 1986 to 1996 solar minima and suggests that solar radiative output trends contributed little of the 0.2°C increase in the global mean surface temperature in the past decade. Nor does our 18-year composite irradiance record support a recent upward irradiance trend inferred from solar cycle length, a parameter used to imply a close linkage in the present century between solar variability and climate change.
CITATION STYLE
Fröhlich, C., & Lean, J. (1999). The Sun’s total irradiance: Cycles, trends and related climate change uncertainties since 1976. Geophysical Research Letters, 25(23), 4377–4380. https://doi.org/10.1029/1998GL900157
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